Work begins on pioneering mushroom farm at Blenheim Estate

Work has begun on a pioneering gourmet mushroom farm on the Blenheim Estate, which will grow Oyster, Lion’s Mane and other varieties of gourmet mushrooms on spawn-inoculated substrate (the growing surface) created from recycled coffee grounds, compostable packaging and sawdust from Blenheim Palace.

The harvested mushrooms will not only be used in the kitchens at Blenheim Palace, but dried and sold in the Palace shop, as well as being sold fresh to local pubs and restaurants. Over 20 Oxfordshire venues, including Michelin-starred restaurants local to the Palace, have expressed interest in buying mushrooms from the Blenheim Estate. The first harvest of mushrooms is expected in September.

The mushroom farm, based in Combe, Oxfordshire, will consist of three units – one for preparation of the substrate and inoculation with mushroom spawn; one for incubation; and a fruiting room.

The preparation of the substrate will be carried out using Tumblebug’s Ecobot. After the harvest from each substrate block is complete, the used substrate will be converted to biochar pellets, energy, and carbon credits. Energy from the new [patent pending] pyrolysis unit will be used to heat the farm and its barns. It is the latest stage in the Country Estate Carbon Demonstrator Project, Blenheim Estate’s collaboration with visionary environmental consultants Tumblebug, and is the first of its kind in the UK.

The Country Estate Carbon Demonstrator Project will unlock the value of Blenheim’s organic waste (food, coffee, compostable packaging, card, manure, green horticultural waste, forestry waste and sheep wool) using Tumblebug’s Ecobot machines and pyrolysis technology.

Roy Cox, Managing Director – Estates at Blenheim Palace, commented: “This project is a major step towards us becoming a net zero business by 2027* and it’s exciting to be part of such a pioneering initiative. Using mushrooms in our restaurant kitchens which have been grown using our own organic waste is the perfect example of a self-sustaining circular ecosystem in action.”

Tumblebug has partnered with fungi partner Urban Farm-It to develop the circular mushroom farm concept. Urban Farm-It will supply the mushroom spawn which will be used in conjunction with the substrate produced by Tumblebug’s own Ecobot machines. The long-term aim for the two partners is to design and sell mushroom farms as ‘cookie cutter’ models and use the engaging story of mushrooms as an education tool to engage people with regenerative solutions.

Tumblebug Founder and CTO, Sylvie Verinder remarked:  “Recovering organic waste to grow mushrooms, with the added benefit of producing green energy and biochar for our growing medium and fertiliser products, not only accelerates the route to Net Zero but has economic and social benefits.”

ENDS

*One of Blenheim Palace and Estate’s 10-year goals is to become carbon neutral on scopes 1-3 of the Greenhouse Gas (GHG) protocol across all operations by 2027.

Issued on behalf of Blenheim Palace and Estate. For more information please contact Jon Perks at Cab Campaign – blenheim@cabcampaign.co.uk

Editors’ notes

About Blenheim Palace

Home to the Dukes of Marlborough since 1705, Blenheim Palace was designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1987. 

Set in over 2,000 acres of ‘Capability’ Brown landscaped parkland and designed by

Vanbrugh in the Baroque style, it was financed by Queen Anne, on behalf of a grateful nation, following the first Duke of Marlborough’s triumph over the French in the War of the Spanish Succession.

Today it houses one of the most important and extensive collections in Europe, which includes portraits, furniture, sculpture and tapestries.

Blenheim Palace is also the birthplace of one of Britain’s most famous leaders, Sir Winston Churchill, and it was his father who described the vista on entering the Estate from the village of Woodstock as the ‘finest view in England’.

About Tumblebug Ltd

Named after nature’s recycling hero, the dung beetle, Tumblebug helps organisations to recover the value in their organic waste. Tumblebug enables recovery at all stages of food production – from on farm, during production, through processing and catering, to retail and consumption.

Whether manure, food, coffee, compostables, card or wool – Tumblebug supports segregation and recovery of organic waste – then rotation of the carbon and nutrients into new products and economic value which is finally used to regenerate our climate through carbon removal and return to the soil via their technological solutions and unique human-centred design approach.

Working with stakeholders to secure behaviour change, Tumblebug’s solution delivers significant reductions in waste management overheads, creates carbon removal opportunities, supports the production of organic C fertilisers and peat-free growing mediums, and supports compliance with mandatory segregation of food waste.

Recover – Rotate – Regenerate

www.tumblebug.co.uk.